It’s up to you to tell us what you had in mind, I think. That may be true, but YOU made the movie, man. ![]() Instead, he said each person must bring his own interpretation. I wish he had been more open about this in his interviews over the years. His films always were about power and control behind the scenes. Yes, these are weird interpretations, but Kubrick always went deeper than any other filmmaker. So he takes over the mission that’s ‘too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it”. And he thinks that the astronauts are too stupid to realize they are just pawns in a game. But HAL’s programming says that the stated mission is to gain knowledge, not make money. For instance, HAL might see the astronauts as lackeys of rich industrialists not interested in knowledge. Also, Kubrick had a lot of conspiracy ideas that he possibly put in the movie in hidden ways. I know this sounds ‘reaching’ but its fun to think about. ![]() It’s our job to realize that we should try to become like the astronaut – to experience a new consciousness. Instead of going through a Stargate, we, the watchers, go through the movie screen into another plane. Therefore, anyone watching the movie is like the Starchild. One of my favorites is that the monolith is really a movie screen turned 90 degrees so its vertical. I’ve since read a lot of stuff about its meaning and I can see many interpretations. We’d sit and talk about the ideas in the movie for hours. And I know others who were affected the same way. I felt like it freed me from an Earthy view of things and took me into outer space. ![]() I loved every scene, every bit of dialog, every contraption, every idea about that movie. I wish I had never seen that movie! The other was 2001. One was The Werewolf, a low budget silly movie that scared the pants offa me as a kid! For years, I was afraid that someone would sneak into my house like in the movie. There are only two movies that had a lasting impact on me. Clarke, IBM, name origins, Stanley Kubrick Reader Interactions Or any one of these other names of fictional computers.įiled Under: Film, Naming Tagged With: 2001, Arthur C. HAL has become such an icon of our culture that we are fortunate neither Clarke or Kubrick noticed the downshift from “IBM,” or this epic computer may have been named “ Siri.” Or Dora. In addition, the IBM logo is shown on the lower arm keypad on Poole’s space suit in the scene where he space walks to replace the antenna unit, and may possibly be shown reflected on Bowman’s face when he is inside the pod on his way to retrieve the body of Poole (there is speculation as to whether or not the reflection is that of the letters “IBM” or the letters “MGM”, the film studio). IBM is given fictional credit as being the manufacturer of the Pan Am Clipper’s computer, and the IBM logo can be seen in the center of the cockpit’s instrument panel. However, about once a week some character spots the fact that HAL is one letter ahead of IBM, and promptly assumes that Stanley and I were taking a crack at the estimable institution … As it happened, IBM had given us a good deal of help, so we were quite embarrassed by this, and would have changed the name had we spotted the coincidence.Īlso, IBM is explicitly mentioned in the film 2001, as are many other real companies. Floyd until Chandra was awoken), who characterized this idea as: “tter nonsense! I thought that by now every intelligent person knew that H-A-L is derived from Heuristic ALgorithmic”.Ĭlarke more directly addressed this issue in his book The Lost Worlds of 2001:Īs is clearly stated in the novel (Chapter 16), HAL stands for Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic computer. In 2010: Odyssey Two, Clarke speaks through the character of Dr. Clarke has always denied this, and the true origin of HAL’s name is recounted on the HAL 9000 Wikipedia page:Īlthough it is often conjectured that the name HAL was based on a one-letter shift from the name IBM, this has been denied by both Clarke and 2001 director Stanley Kubrick. Legend has it that the name HAL was derived because each letter comes one place before IBM in the alphabet. ![]() The HAL 9000 computer is one of the stars of Stanley Kubrick’s science-fiction film masterpiece, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and the novel it is based on by Arthur C.
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